The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 20, 1922, Page 1

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JUDAS —a feminine betrayer, the woman he had loved, allied herself with the HIDDEN FORCES that were fighting to wreck the lumber business he had built. THE FIGHT against overwhelming odds, the bitterness of soul, the des- peration of last resort, impending defeat, then— MEDAINE ROBINETTE, _ glorious, primitive, true, breed of the fighting, — never-surrendering wilderness— READ in The Star, starting Monday, June 26, the latest great romance of ~ the woods, from the pen of Courtney | Ryley Cooper— THE WHITE DESERT. Watch for it! DISTRUSTED by his father, who was influenced by cireumstantial evi- dence— BARRY HOUSTON sped from the home he loved and from false friends to the merciless, the beautiful, the changeable Great White Desert of the continental divide, there to work out his salvation in God’s Wilderness. COMING! FALSELY accused of murder—a sacri- fice to the political ambitions of an unscrupulous attorney— DESERTED by his friends in his hour of greatest need— » The paper with a 15,000 daily circulation lead over its nearest competitor The Seattle Star Entered as Second Class Matter May 8, 1899, at the Postoffice at Seattle, Wash, under the Act of Congrwas March 3, 1879 Per Year, by Mail, $6 to $9 _ VOLUME 24. NO. 99. Ee SEATTLE, WASH,, TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1922. TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE DRIVE TO CONQUER RUSS EMPIRE May Result From Honeymoon of Jugoslavs’ King WISH TO SELL |America’s Wonder Boy a Reg’lar Fellow|HHISPERS OF TO A STINGY |His Triamph Is Dimmed by Death of Pet| MQNARCHIAL DRIVE HEARD Diplomats Think GUNBOATS SH 2 BUILDINGS IN CANTON ATTACH Life and Property Are Menaced | Sun Yat Sen for Further Bombardment WASHINGTON, June 20.—With a ther bombardment of Canton American Minister Schurmann, at has advised Rear Admiral Strauss, « mander of the American fleet in Asis waters, that American life and ibe in need of immediate protection, it 1 |announced at the state department toc Schurmann forwarded to the frm 3,C Hunton, American cour Casto, f stated that the first attack on Canton by Sun Y¥: boats had resulted in > buildings. HOME EDITION 3 Baron, Fersen at By Robert B. Bermann Would you Mke-“te make whipped cream out of cream that’s too fresh to whip? *Do you want to sell a $500 fur coat to the stingicst woman in town? Or do you have a yraruing to tel “Top o” the Mornin’.” Why not call it “Here's How"? starting point of a new monarch- feal drive on Russia, Its object, secording to this suspicion, ix to place the young couple on the throne on which the Romanoffs sat until the rev- . Another bimbo raise all the ships that were : aaaiions submarined during the war and 2 P | While the king and his bride, | | tote ‘em up to the top of Mt. “e whose native country of Rumanta | Of course, the hotel will have to) Everest? | Mes between Jugosiavia and the rich | Ukraine region of Russia, are honey mooning in Beed, Slovenia, the pos wibility of Alexander sitting on the | Russian throne is discussed in whin- pers in court circles in several cap- | tals, If such a plot exists and suc | coeds, it will mean that Queen | | 1 | | ;Police and Sheriff's Men | Trail Speeding Machine Police and deputy sheriffs were searching the entire north end of the city Tuesday following a report of the kidnaping of a woman by four automobile ban- have a “governor's suite,” with spe-| ial brass cuspidors for Louie Hart oe. It you'd like to do any of these little things, Just apply to Baron Eugene Fersen and he'll teli you how—upon receipt of a modest consideration of $50. that’s what the moderately large dience at} Boy Sent to Death Killed Chum, They Said Case Thoroly “Proved” | ~ Slayer Later Turns Up} — | / vern executed in Amerton aes 1390—a little more than 30 years. One hundred more will And we hope they will put a stack of extra-fine non-absorbent paper towels and a box of non-in Ygf'ammable matches in every room. HONK! HONK! | baron | and | least, | promised a oderately enthusiastic Marie of Rumania, most famous matchmaker of E “Ope, Autoist arrested for going 52 the Arena Monday night, when he/ has played the biggest card in miles an hour on Pike st. G red the first of a series of] her career. dits. | Tho woman, fighting desperate- | It will mean that her daughter will rule as royal consort over the greatest empire under the Pike st. isn’t 52 miles long! . on! “free lectures” Latent Powers ar on “Man‘s} 4d How to Develop| ly against her ¢ © by an employe of the Maplewood dairy as she was carried past in singing “From | | royal | sun. tains.” » secret, Fersen said vee ; | Reports of this gossip evidently! an automobile speeding north on- | : which reached King Alexan¢ for| Fairview ave, | | Bave gone to. the sehewuas And Comrade War over at the jectricity 9 . | | the electric chair when the ade ee Le se gs dB ; | he denied it thru implication in a) The dairyman’s attention was srenent year onus, tae says she the weath fi usiness when | public statement some time before drawn to her by muffled’ screams| | ® ¥ ee will 0 Say It} it is properly harnessed / | his marriage. which she uttered despite the fact aay! to their deaths procialas _With Showers. “The atomic energy contained tn a} | “My task an king of Jugoslavia,”|that one of the men had his hand prin athe progr ona eed taste 06 sented," .:ne..40ib bho |he said, “will be to organize my | across her mouth and was trying to} \ Vea by evidence which satis olyum over | 4 ig sufficient to raise every | country internally and cure it of the | throw an overcoat over her head. a ne fied the jury “beyond a rea sonable doubt,” were guiltless, The following article is the first of a series of six, dealing with the law's mistakes, which will be printed in this news all the e on the The automobile, a high-powered | touring car, was traveling at a rate 60 miles an hour. that was sut P | ravages of war. I and my people de- war from | sire nothing more than peace.” | despite this denial, some un. sts lend background to ip of intrigue, They are d during the m of the ntain in the ds or enable! ea to| But 7 y He kiased a o lor, t j 4 eh 1 Kin Alexander is the most! but he was unable to But her f id “I remember once in Cleveland 1| Mons gion reigy Homage arte ange hicr bln ere | \ paper—Kditor. B was three,| was invited to supper at the home| throne, being today the most pow Later the p were inforn | % And the girl was two years old. |of one of my students. She was dis }ful reigning Slavic monarch. He| that the automobile had been seen as| By Alexander Herman ~ a : : > appointed because she found that her | spent much of his youth and gained |it passed Gersix Manufacturing After many years in the Ohie oy) Be. thatves & may, Ot Ostandelere whip. But 1| much of his education in Russia | emy 2 which firm said it bore! penitentiary, a Toledo man wae M hat the Seattle of my students! Robert Murray, 138, of® | TWO: Alexand een harbor: | licens: », 176119. ‘This is for a for. re 029 not give him suffi use her atomic energy—and the|mon4mq marvelous singe (Turn to Page 7, Column 4) lhire car, and was issued to Harola| eleased recently—an innocent cient advertising |cream was whipped |Tacoma, marvelous singer, lie’ cuetaar sels shia ove | of the law! He had 00 } * who will appear at the Moore i a ae | committed the crime for We wouldn't mi with her flower if the n Pjur 401 made us do it. i | eo ‘Cause you bring last night no near. | a clinging kise— ply perfect bins. You were born midat white meonli Some time during Thursday night. Have you come to me to stay And comfort me till Saturday? decided n another occasion, a student of 9 was a saleswoman, noted for their miserli. y using atomic power tely the ushers up the colle everyone finding out how to harness his “atomic power.” But not until they’d all got pamphlets in which the baron promised to give ‘em the low- down—at $50 per. Mother Suing te’ See Her Daughter Hearing on @ motion to show caune | ¢ why Mrs. Rowe Hilton should not be ay i permitted to see her 13-year-old As the i Saturday? daughter, Edn, Spe started Tet pidwore, tell me tne, day in Judge A Frater’s Has SHE got « coldsore, t ed Mrs. Hilton was divorced in “re 7 from George encer, In Se. Rabe Ruth's weakness ts sald to be | * The custody of the child was | a jon te utside -{ given to the father. The mother, in Ours is @ highball on the inside, | her complaint, declares she has not . * | been permitted to visit the child since Speaking of names, Westminster | t me, She was married, Febru Abbey died the other day in New) “ry 17 last, to R iflton. - 078 |Fugitive Convict * ri Ger ov Is Again Captured | VAME OSSINNING, N. ¥., June 20— | Girls w Charles Greer, “the killer,” who | carry a spare escaped from Sing Sing, was captur cs Mjed today at Harmon, three miles (Turn to Page 7, Column 3) 4 | from the prison, \Lad With Range of cally better than all the stories theater here tonight. 5 Notes Beyond Piano to Sing “I—I've had « wonderful time. An’ it's great to be home an’ see all the folks again, B—but—" Manly little “Bob” Murray's voice trailed off into what sound usly Ike a sob. st completed the exp vee that ¢ er bad in all the By June d’Amour mort | ammo HRER rousing ! “f we Here's one man ) ist He had received nati who thinks} » for his pre nough of the ies. He wa wedding contest in Tacoma hat I'm conduct ing for The Star and Herb Schoen feld that he's de clded to ure of a Caruso practi assured And yet he couldn't keep the catch out of hig voice at that first recep: yatpone tion. hig white Spitz dog, had died ge Prors © in” while he was away—and the me 0a ee on the contest, news was broken to him on his arrival. i That little incident describes Bob And if thatdsn’t a real compli- hin | ment I'd like to know what Is. | “I appreciate your liberal offer of | a free wedding,” be writes, “and you | wil! notice I am taking advantage of | it. My exsay is enclosed. 1 have | been in Washington only a few days land the girl whom I am to marry, of artistic triumphs Because, despite the fact that he’s been as “America’s the (Lurn to Page 7, Column 6) 4“ to Enter Contest! SLAYER GETS | LIFE IN JAIL! IN; Mich., wud, > June 20. 1 worker, pleaded guilty in the otr cult cc re te nd was sen ay a in soll. Marquette « penitentiary An guard of heavily arme to prevent mob vio- | len d the way from Lansing | ng the morning, and} dur ub was rushed thru. } Judge Benjamin Williams passed | | sentence Jackson , Me still in| t , Minn, but we had! § planned on being married at Seattle, 26. Four days later is O. K s looking abead to the happy bra oan, w,(Prince of Wales | Here's his essay on “Why We - | Want to Get Married | Is Nearing Home| rmal human be. nsonw why we “As we are just 1 ings, Tam sure our wish to marry are not very different from those other young couples would give, The first and greatest is that we love and desire a more intimate companionship than public opinion will sanction outside of mar. we wish to be to time and that cannot PLYMOUTH, England, June 20 | Returning from his trip to Japan ‘and India, the Prince of Wales will | larrive here this evening aboard the battleship Renown, Additional interest 1s attached to | his return because of the presence tn | | England of Yolanda, of | | Italy, and the public wonders wheth: | er there ig any significance in their © unless we marry, ‘The instinctive | meoting craving for a mate cannot be satis een fied by less than taking and possess-| ATH ORIN cattle, n your own littl me led in Los Ang rd ing to word received here Tuesday by the girl's parent, Mra, C. Hall, | 1644 W, 50th st. Funeral reereét wi ny uly bondage. yolumn 4) ments will be made in Los Angeles. (Turn to Page -j|on the HARDING CAN’T GO TO ALASKA WASHINGTON, June Prest- dent Harding probably will not make a trip to Alaska thi mer, it was stated at the White He today, Pressing governmental matters will prevent the president making so long a trip, 7 MEN DIE IN RAIL TRAGEDY Mo., 20.— The call of the Kansas harvest took seven lives today, The men, all har vest hands on their way to Wichita and Newton, were killed in accidents nta Fe ratlroad, An eighth possibly fatally injured, KANSAS -CITY, June man wai Prison Looms for Union Labor Head CHICAGO, June 20.—Fred Mader, president of the Chicago Building Trades Council, today faced a sen. tence of one year in the penitentiary and payment of a fine of $1,000 He was convicted by a jury at mid- night on charges of conspiracy to halt construction on the Drake hotel | and conspiracy to extort money thru calling of strikes. | which he had been convicted, Have there been other guiltless. } persons = in is country whe have suffered a like fate—or | worse? | One of the earliest instances of such irretrievable miscarriage of justice was recorded in Louisiana, A young man named Boynton was stopping with a friend at a tavern jon the Mississipp!, Chums for | years, they vorked, played and |lived together. Sometimes they quarreled, But it was always @ ndly tiff which was soon forgot | ten | One day the friend was found mun dered in a rice field, By his side were Boynton’s pistols. The authorities rushed to the boys? room. Boynton was asleep. | Without awakening him they |searched around. In his hat they |found a slip of paper which had been seen in his friend's hand @ short time before The boy jumped up with a start, Before he had time to collect his j route, he was placed under arm J7 rest— al | Charged with murder! 4 |. It was like a nightmare. Not only | had he lost his best friend but he ioee in danger of losing his own life, | too. | At the trial witnesses told of hay. ing seen the two boys near the rice | field a short time before the murder, Boynton was convicted, In the very face of death he kept (Turn to Page 7, Columa @ ene

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